ABSTRACT

This book introduces the concept of Water Diplomacy as a principled and pragmatic approach to problem-driven interdisciplinary collaboration, which has been developed as a response to pressing contemporary water challenges arising from the coupling of natural and human systems.

The findings of the book are the result of a decade-long interdisciplinary experiment in conceiving, developing, and implementing an interdisciplinary graduate program on Water Diplomacy at Tufts University, USA. This has led to the development of the Water Diplomacy Framework, a shared framework for understanding, diagnosing, and communicating about complex water issues across disciplinary boundaries. This framework clarifies important distinctions between water systems - simple, complicated, or complex - and the attributes that these distinctions imply for how these problems can be addressed. In this book, the focus is on complex water issues and how they require a problem-driven rather than a theory-driven approach to interdisciplinary collaboration. Moreover, it is argued that conception of interdisciplinarity needs to go beyond collaboration among experts, because complex water problems demand inclusive stakeholder engagement, such as in fact-value deliberation, joint fact finding, collective decision making, and adaptive management. Water professionals working in such environments need to operate with both principles and pragmatism in order to achieve actionable, sustainable, and equitable outcomes. This book explores these ideas in more detail and demonstrates their efficacy through a diverse range of case studies. Reflections on the program are also included, from conceptualization through implementation and evaluation.

This book offers critical lessons and case studies for researchers and practitioners working on complex water issues as well as important lessons for those looking to initiate, implement, or evaluate interdisciplinary programs to address other complex problems in any setting.

part I|69 pages

Problem-driven interdisciplinary collaboration

chapter 1|19 pages

Origins

Conceptualization, implementation, and evolution of an interdisciplinary graduate program on Water Diplomacy

chapter 2|19 pages

Making distinctions

The importance of recognizing complexity in coupled natural and human systems

chapter 3|14 pages

Working together

An argument for problem-driven interdisciplinary collaboration

chapter 4|15 pages

Principled pragmatism

How Water Diplomats approach complex water issues

part II|169 pages

Problem-driven interdisciplinary collaboration in action

chapter 5|6 pages

Operationalizing problem-driven interdisciplinary collaboration

An overview of case studies from the Tufts Water Diplomacy program

chapter 6|38 pages

Flood diplomacy

The hydrological, technical, and sociopolitical challenges of delineating usable floodplain boundaries

chapter 7|19 pages

Cholera in Haiti

Why many efforts have failed and how we can do better

chapter 8|30 pages

Water Diplomacy at the macro scale

Agricultural groundwater governance in the High Plains Aquifer region of the United States

chapter 10|21 pages

Confronting the natural domain

Strategies for addressing ecology and conservation in complex water management challenges

chapter 12|16 pages

Coupling and complexity of natural and human systems

A case study from the southwestBangladesh delta

part III|56 pages

Looking back and looking forward

chapter 13|20 pages

Evaluation of an interdisciplinary graduate program

Lessons learned from the Tufts Water Diplomacy program

chapter 15|14 pages

Perspectives on Water Diplomacy

Key findings, remaining challenges, and future directions

chapter 16|5 pages

Quo Vadis?